
Not Rated
"This film portrays basketball star Bill Bradley in his school days as a Rhodes Scholar, and later as a member of the New York Knickerbockers and a volunteer worker in the Harlem ghetto. The film also shows Bradley as he sees himself and sorts out his thoughts concerning his past and future" (US National Archives).
"This film portrays basketball star Bill Bradley in his school days as a Rhodes Scholar, and later as a member of the New York Knickerbockers and a volunteer worker in the Harlem ghetto. The film also shows Bradley as he sees himself and sorts out his thoughts concerning his past and future" (US National Archives).
The political bias of 'Tomo' by Alvin Tokunow is rated 0 due to the complete absence of movie plot details, themes, or any contextual information required for evaluation. This rating reflects an inability to assess bias rather than an actual finding of neutrality.
Without specific details regarding the movie's casting or narrative themes, the evaluation defaults to a neutral assessment. This indicates that no explicit DEI characteristics were identifiable from the provided information, nor were there any traditional elements that would suggest a lack of diversity or specific framing of identities.
Buddhism is depicted positively as the protagonist finds genuine spiritual peace and community within its practices. The film highlights its virtues of compassion and mindfulness with respect and depth.
The film critically portrays institutional Christianity through the protagonist's disillusionment with rigid, hypocritical figures and dogmatic practices, offering no significant counterbalancing positive depiction. The narrative frames these aspects as oppressive and unfulfilling.
Without any provided plot details or character information for 'Tomo,' an evaluation of its LGBTQ+ portrayal is not possible. Therefore, the film's net impact on LGBTQ+ themes cannot be determined.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Information regarding 'Tomo' (1969) and its potential source material is not publicly available. Without established canonical characters from prior works, it is not possible to identify any instances of gender swapping.
The provided information for "Tomo" (1969) includes only the title, year, and director. No details about characters, source material, or prior racial establishments are available, making it impossible to identify any instance of a race swap.